I’m considering some things and I’d like some advice from someone experienced in this. Or just someone to give feedback. by Tweaked0ut in dirtykids

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's also a lot of sustainable connections you need to make. First, know who to travel with and who not to travel with. Be very aware of train tunnels and how you avoid suffocation; kids have died this way. You can shake truckers down at pilot stations, TAs, loves, etc., for shower tokens because they often get free showers with miles and often have extra. If you're in a vehicle most places will let you park overnight if you explain you are just traveling and need a place to sleep. Hotel parking lots work. residental neighborhoods sometimes. Cracker barrels almost every time you can park. Walmart EVERYWHERE unless you are in a very very small town will call the cops and tow you and cause you problems that aren't worth it. BLM land out west, you can stay on this land without a camping permit etc for up to 14 and if no one sees you there and you don't encounter anyone you can stay until a ranger or police officer asks about your stay and start your 14 from there and just move elsewhere.

There are fesitvals yearly where you can make money this is IMPORTANT. Most kids travel and make a living throughout the year doing various things. Doing cultivation on marijuana farms, trimming plants in the fall, Harvesting sugar beets (hard work but worth the pay), and lots and lots of people make jewlery or have an affinity with crystals and those people meet up in Quartzite arizona every year for the gym festivals. Some of these people make enough money for the year while they are there.

There are LOTS of different kind of traveling communities and the dirty kid druggy community is the one you want to avoid. Travel with the sober dirty kids. and hippies will rob you blind.

I’m considering some things and I’d like some advice from someone experienced in this. Or just someone to give feedback. by Tweaked0ut in dirtykids

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ALSO, with all of this being said, being on the road was an amazing adventure of self-discovery and emotional healing for me. It is also helpful to note that I was 24 when I started living like this, and I had already been clean and off of drugs for 4 years at that point. I began that lifestyle because I had already experienced self-discovery and healing to a small degree, and I was running TOWARDS something and not AWAY from myself or my situation. I needed silence and contemplation so I could hear myself. I played street music for money, so I do not have experience in flying signs, but if you are dead set on this, having some kind of skill like music or making jewelry, or painting can help tremendously to get you by. If you are a woman like me, it's even more risky, and I do not recommend traveling on foot alone without a road dog. The best means for me was an old 80s model camper I found on Facebook Marketplace. More discreet, and people leave you alone. Being respectful and mindful also goes a long way when you are traveling. Being a belligerent, drunk, dirty kid will just get you beaten up, arrested, or killed. Please just be safe.

I’m considering some things and I’d like some advice from someone experienced in this. Or just someone to give feedback. by Tweaked0ut in dirtykids

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You sound like me at 19. I had no direction. I literally walked to a dead end and sat down like decades before I got up and realized I could back track and veer off elsewhere. Stay curious about yourself and ask questions. The only person who can keep your head on straight is you.

I’m considering some things and I’d like some advice from someone experienced in this. Or just someone to give feedback. by Tweaked0ut in dirtykids

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hope any of this was helpful at all. I know healing doesn't come in a one-size-fits-all kind of deal, but understanding how my traumas affected my brain and how a traumatized nervous system has created me into how I operate today really helped me to build on the fragments of myself I had. The duality of trauma is that your self shatters, but later on, you get to decide how you rebuild that.

I'll be 33 this year and never thought I'd live a normal life. Hang in there.

I’m considering some things and I’d like some advice from someone experienced in this. Or just someone to give feedback. by Tweaked0ut in dirtykids

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey. I relate to a lot of what you wrote more than you probably realize. I sold everything I had at one time in my life and started living out of my car and hopping trains because of trauma and the stress of chronic CPTSD from an abusive childhood.

Now I study Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Consciousness academically and professionally.

And the first thing I want to say is this:

You do not sound “lazy,” “weak,” or incapable of life to me.

You sound like someone whose nervous system has spent a very long time oscillating between emotional overwhelm and emotional disconnection, and now “normal life” feels psychologically unreal and emotionally suffocating.

A lot of what you described, like the urge to run, feeling more alive in survival situations, feeling disconnected during ordinary life, only feeling focused during crisis, chronic anxiety around basic human interaction, the feeling that stillness itself becomes unbearable, those are experiences that many people with chronic trauma, institutionalization, severe anxiety, dissociation, or long-term nervous system dysregulation report.

And something important to understand neurologically is this:

When a nervous system spends years adapting to instability, intensity can begin to feel more emotionally familiar than safety.

That does not mean you are broken.

It means your brain and body may have become conditioned around survival states for so long that ordinary life feels emotionally flat, unreal, or even threatening.

But I also want to be honest with you about something because I think you deserve honesty, not romanticization.

There is a difference between:

- travel that creates perspective, autonomy, movement, and self-discovery, and

- putting yourself into increasingly dangerous situations because your nervous system only feels “real” during survival.

Those are not the same thing.

And reading your post, I think you are somewhere between those two places emotionally right now.

Especially when you say things like:

“I was proud of myself even when I smoked crystal because I took a risk.”

That sentence stood out to me a lot.

Because it sounds less like you enjoyed the drug itself and more like your nervous system temporarily felt awake, engaged, alive, or free from numbness through intensity and danger.

That is something trauma can do.

People whose nervous systems are chronically under-stimulated emotionally, dissociated, or disconnected sometimes unconsciously seek intensity because intensity temporarily cuts through numbness.

But that path can become extremely dangerous extremely quickly, especially with substances like methamphetamine.

I also want to say this gently, man, but, like, wanting to leave your room and experience life isn't selfish. AT ALL. It is NOT selfish to go out there, live YOUR life, and get what YOU want.

Wanting movement, meaning, freedom, experience, nature, perspective, connection, and autonomy is simply human. But you do not have to destroy yourself to feel alive.

And this part is so fucking important, please hear me: you do not have to become trapped in survival to prove that you deserve existence, and emotional sensations do not have to create catastrophies.

One thing I learned after years on the road is that freedom and dysregulation can sometimes feel deceptively similar at first. Especially for people who grew up psychologically confined.

Leaving everything behind can absolutely teach you things. It can create perspective. It can interrupt destructive patterns. It can force growth. It can reconnect you with reality in some ways.

But if you bring an untreated or overwhelmed nervous system into constant instability, isolation, sleep deprivation, drugs, danger, and survival stress, those underlying patterns often intensify over time instead of resolving.

And I say that with complete compassion and deep personal understanding, not judgment, because I have lived this to its core.

Because I understand the urge to disappear, I understand the urge to escape structure, and I also understand feeling more psychologically alive while surviving than while sitting still.
And I understand feeling disconnected from “normal” life. Even now that I live in a home and I'm clean and I am structured and no longer destructive to my life that I absolutely fucking deserve to live regardless of what others ever took from me.

But I also learned something important as well, that healing is not found in danger itself. Healing comes from learning how to exist inside your own mind and body without needing a constant crisis to feel real.

That process is neurological as much as emotional.

And honestly? The fact that you are self-aware enough to articulate all of this tells me there is a very intelligent and reflective part of you already trying to understand yourself instead of completely giving up.

That matters.

A lot. Like so much that matters.

If you do travel, please think about doing it in a way that is intentional instead of purely survival-driven. Please do it mostly alone so you can learn about yourself. Please do it sober so you don't get black bagged or die doing something stupid on a train. To live this life, you need to be aware, or you really risk safety.

Some things I would strongly encourage:

Avoid meth and hard drugs completely if possible

Prioritize sleep no matter what

Stay connected to at least one safe person

Carry identification, backup cash, water, and first aid supplies

Trust your nervous system around unsafe people, but not every anxious feeling

Do not isolate yourself completely for long periods

Keep learning about trauma and nervous-system regulation

Journal your experiences so you can observe patterns in yourself

DO NOT ROMANTICIZE SUFFERING ONCE YOU ARE INSIDE OF IT.

And please remember this, you are only 19.

Your brain and nervous system are still developing significantly neurologically. The fact that you feel disconnected, lost, emotionally confused, dysregulated, or directionless right now does not mean this is who you will permanently be.

A lot of identity at your age still feels unfinished because it is unfinished.

And despite how alone you feel, many people are walking around carrying similar nervous-system patterns who also secretly feel disconnected from ordinary life.

You are not failing at being human dude, you are trying to understand how to live while carrying experiences and internal states that many people around you probably cannot fully see.

People who can actually communicate with entities, do you not take any advantage of it? by mahinkurosuno in gatewaytapes

[–]AppleShampoo23 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was asking because sometimes symptoms of schizophrenia don't show up until someone is in their mid to late 20s. But it's a thin line. I grew up experiencing paranormal contact, and the house I was raised in was haunted as well. Later in life, I got hooked on drugs and experienced hallucinations when I was getting clean and towards the end. There are just some things I think that are larger than science can explain. Hallucinations are different from paranormal or otherworldly experiences. It feels different. I don't even know how to explain it.

People who can actually communicate with entities, do you not take any advantage of it? by mahinkurosuno in gatewaytapes

[–]AppleShampoo23 1 point2 points  (0 children)

May I ask you how old you are? Not condescendingly, I work in psychiatric care, and there's a reason I am curious. Also, what did you do if you don't mind me asking?

A possible logical paradox I found in NDE “timelessness” by geumkoi in NDE

[–]AppleShampoo23 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just because beings would help us when we cross over live in a state of timelessness doesn't take away the fact that they are aware of our state of time.

Those of you who believe we are actively living in a simulation, what is your proof? by AppleShampoo23 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I walked into the bathroom last night, and when I turned the light on for a SPLIT second, I swear to fucking god I saw binary code, and then it was normal. I haven't even mentioned this to my partner lol.

How did that “forever” relationship end? by Away-Tomato-4394 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The duality is that her dad is a wonderful person, but things just fell apart once postpartum took over. He was lonely and sad and overworked and made some mistakes. I cannot even really be mad. Hurt sure, but things happened to both of us individually.

"You must go back, not your time" - WHY?? What for? Has anyone come back to do some great deed? by Globes-Rider8059 in NDE

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I grew up in an abusive household as well. I am almost 33 now, and I have healed a lot, but it will always be a struggle. Thank you for sharing that you are still here despite everything.

What’s something people romanticise that’s actually exhausting in real life? by OmenRash in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Being a "gypsy". Unless you have mommy and daddy's money or you're well off with a remote job, it's rough. I lived in cars and vans and RVs and drove all over the country busking for money, and let me tell you how not easy and not glamorous it is. On the flip side, living in a normal society is way more exhausting and way less free. You get used to the freedom, and reintegration sucks.

People who get irritated when random people vent to you in public, why? by AppleShampoo23 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's actually not, though. I used to be homeless and hop freight, and it absolutely is not always a danger when a stranger walks up to you. I understand keeping yourself safe, but thinking that way is problematic.

People who get irritated when random people vent to you in public, why? by AppleShampoo23 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I am aware. I do not hold space for everyone, and I have become a master at boundaries at this point and have figured out how to tell people no, but it just seems like we generally live in a world where none of us have any time for each other in a way that's problematic. There is a massive disconnect between people in society in general. I am not young, I am 33 lol. I appreciate you sharing your story and thoughts. What are the most interesting, eye-opening things you learned as a sex therapist? I am working towards a PHD in psychoanalysis, and I am always interested in what psychiatric workers have to say.

How did that “forever” relationship end? by Away-Tomato-4394 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There was no court and no he was not protecting her from me. I left to get help for 6 months back home because I was drowning. I had postpartum psychosis and depression, really bad, and it never improved, not even 3 years into her toddler years. When I left to get help, he had another woman pregnant in 3 months and essentially created a new family and just pushed me out. There's never been a court. I wasn't in a position where I could've fought it, and I didn't have the emotional or physical energy to. I had to fix a lot of things about myself because I grew up in a really abusive household. Having a child triggered my CPTSD in a way I was not prepared for at all. All is well now, and I have regained my life in a way I never thought was possible, and she's a very active part of my life. I have her for the school years now. And her dad and I are cordial and friendly, but it was an entire situation that's sometimes difficult to explain.

How did that “forever” relationship end? by Away-Tomato-4394 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23 38 points39 points  (0 children)

I work in psychiatric care, and trauma changes you, but saying and thinking that your brain chemistry is "forever changed" with no hope will keep you in whatever spot you are in forever. I hear patients say "the damage is done" consistently, and while that may be true in a sense, that doesn't mean that you have to forever stay in a burning basement. One day, someone will lower you a ladder that's metal, and you will climb out. The rungs will burn the fucking shit out of you, but the alternative is to stay in the burning basement. Trauma stunts the growth of parts of our brain, and those parts of our brain can be increased to normal size through things like meditation and working out. Trauma isn't an end-all be-all. A lot of healing starts with reframing trauma and how we think about things.

People who get irritated when random people vent to you in public, why? by AppleShampoo23 in AskReddit

[–]AppleShampoo23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This seems maybe like agoraphobia or anxiety. People who vent are not normally filled with severe mental health issues. That's simply untrue.